Are you one of the half of Americans who say money management is part of their self-care routine or one of the 41% of young adults who think financial well-being means having multiple streams of income?
On It's Been a Minute, I'm investigating how young people are turning to OnlyFans,
sports betting, and Klarna to stretch every last dollar.
That's all month long on the It's Been a Minute podcast from NPR.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Giles Snyder.
The fate of what President Trump calls his big, beautiful bill is now in the hands of the Senate.
House Republicans narrowly pass that massive tax and spending bill early Thursday morning along party lines.
And now NPR's Deidre Walsh says senators are talking about some major changes.
There are going to be changes.
And it's possible at the end of the day,
the sort of one thing that brings the Republican Party together,
extending these tax cuts, could be sort of the one thing that ends up.
sort of being the easier thing to get done, along with money for the border.
Medicaid cuts could be a problem for some Senate Republicans.
And there are other conservatives in the Senate who just dismiss the House bill as really not serious on slashing spending.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has said that he wants to push the bill through by the Fourth of July holiday.
Federal judge has struck down President Trump's executive order targeting the law firm of Jenner and blocked.
This is the second time a court has permanently blocked one of Trump's orders against a major law firm.
Here's NPR's Ryan Lucas.
In his 52-page ruling, U.S.